Yesterday a study was released by the Department of Justice’s Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) that estimates that at least 88,500 adults held in U.S. prisons and jails were sexually abused at their current facility in the past year.
What is astonishing is that the Obama DOJ has been studying and reviewing proposals to reduce sexual violence in detention by establishing national standards for staff sexual misconduct for 14 months. Nothing has been finalized and each day more inmates are being raped, harassed and abused while Attorney General Eric Holder doesn’t act, defying a congressional deadline set national standards to reduce this criminal activity. Look at what is going on (via Just Detention International):

According to the BJS, 4.4 percent of prison inmates and 3.1 percent of jail inmates reported having experienced one or more incidents of sexual victimization by other inmates and/or staff at their current facility in the preceding 12 months. While some suffered a single assault, others were raped repeatedly: on average, victims were abused three to five times over the course of the year. The survey did not include minors held in these facilities, but in a similar BJS report released in January 2010, more than 12 percent of youth in juvenile detention reported sexual abuse, or one in eight.
JDI has testimony of just a few of the egregious cases of abuse.
Inmates with a history of sexual abuse, and those who identify as gay or transgender are exceptionally vulnerable, and JDI hears from such inmates on a daily basis. In another letter received by JDI last week, James, an openly gay prisoner in Michigan who has been raped more than 20 times by numerous inmates over the course of several years, asked, “Do you know what it’s like to see their faces each day? Seeing the look they give me? Knowing that they smile and laugh…”In both men’s and women’s facilities, staff perpetrators tend to be of the opposite sex from the victim. “Allowing staff unlimited access to inmates of the opposite sex — including when they are in states of undress — encourages sexual abuse. Yet, such cross-gender supervision remains standard practice in most U.S. prisons and jails,” said Lovisa Stannow, Executive Director of Just Detention International.
Another inmate who wrote to JDI last week, Nathan in Wyoming, described an officer fondling his genitalia while passing out medication. A nurse who observed the groping did nothing, simply stating, “I know I didn’t see what I just saw.” After reporting the incident, Nathan was transferred to another prison. He has not received information about the outcome of the investigation.
…”Sexual abuse in detention is a stain on our society,” said Stannow. “Every day that the Attorney General doesn’t finalize the national standards is another day of anguish among prisoner rape survivors, of preventable safety breaches in prisons and jails, and of significant spending of taxpayers’ money on medical treatment, investigations, and litigation that could have been avoided.“
And what about the standards recommended by the Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA)?
These standards include limitations on cross-gender supervision. They also call for staff training and inmate education, the provision of medical and mental health treatment to sexual abuse victims, and regular independent, external audits to hold agencies accountable for failures to keep inmates safe from abuse. By law, Attorney General Eric Holder had until June 23, 2010 to ratify binding standards, but he missed this deadline and no new date has been set. Once the Attorney General issues final standards, they will be immediately binding on federal facilities. States and localities will have one year to get into compliance or risk losing five percent of their corrections-related federal funding.And the clock is ticking as the abuse continues…



Another inmate who wrote to JDI last week, Nathan in Wyoming, described an officer fondling his genitalia while passing out medication. A nurse who observed the groping did nothing, simply stating, “I know I didn’t see what I just saw.” After reporting the incident, Nathan was transferred to another prison. He has not received information about the outcome of the investigation.
11 Comments



Sexual harrassment is rampant not only in prisonFacts tell us that sexual abused happens not only in prisons but also within our home. It so sad that they are doing that degrading act to the victims and use their authority to abuse them. Elimination is impossible but if we had strict law, I am very much sure that it will lessen a great degree.
For-profit prisonsI wonder how much worse the sexual abuse problem is in the private prison sector. If Holder does get off his ass and ratifies the standards, let’s hope that the for-profit prisons are held up to just as much (if not more) scrutiny as the state and federal systems.
I hate the smell of fake fierce advocacy in the morning
Actually, its getting kinda funky smelling… Maybe some fresh minds will help
One of those nightmare scenariosI’ve often thought about what would happen to me if I went to a male prison. Mostly, the nightmares involve exactly what these poor people have been through.
We need an overhaul of our corrections officers in this country as well as a new policy regarding trans folks in prison.
I still shudder when I think about it. Especially considering that I live in a state where there is no medical marijuana.
I think that there is something systematically wrong with what happens to corrections officers. I still remember a college experiment where half the class were “prisoners” and half were “guards”. The students who played guards were able to rationalize terrible behavior. And that was a controlled experiment. True cruelty by the hands of guards must be nearly nation-wide.
Z
AG Holder can’t address this issue…he’s too busy planning the appeal of the DOMA ruling. Why bother helping anyone in need, even if it is your responsibility to do so, when you can spend your time denying Constitutional rights to American citizens.
Next PresidentNothing will get done. This is just one more example of avoiding LGBT issues. Besides this issue is about those nasty people in jail. Don’t want to associate Obama with those people.
Threats from a Lesbian U.S. Federal MarshallLong story short, when U.S. Federal Marshalls came to my door one day (to discuss a particular post on my blog), , one came out to me and shared that she was a lesbian. Then she decided to try to use FEAR to “persuade” me to her way of thinking, yelling over and over (verbatim):
“Do you know what happens to gay men in prison?!”
(she has worked for a few years in the prison system)
My first thought was, “How fucking dare you try to use the threat of RAPE as a way to get your way!”. It was as if she was using RAPE as a law enforcement tool. If I were a woman I wonder if she would have used the threat of RAPE as a bargaining tool. Despicable.
Color me totally not shockedSad to say, but I wouldn’t be surprised if most law enforcement officials (and sadly, much of the general public as well) actually do think of prison rape as just another one of the “justice” system’s many means of punishment…
They don’t careTo most people, “prisoners” are not people.
They are bad people and we shouldn’t care.
I care.
Byrson Martel died recentlyBryson Martel obituary